![]() ![]() Stefan contacts lawyers who says he is sure to win. Uncle Naé challenges the interpretation of the will. To everyone’s surprise, he describes Stefan as his favourite nephew in his will and seems to leave more than he does to the others. This is foolish given that Také has no other heirs and the family is always worried that, on a whim, he may leave his money to charity. Stefan, for the second time in the book, speaks out of turn and attacks his uncle. At a lunch given by Také, attended by the family, Také is critical of Corneliu, his younger brother and Stefan’s father. Také, fifteen years older than his brother, is a very rich miser. Naé is a liberal and at times outspoken member of parliament. ![]() His mother lives with her daughters till they marry and move away. Stefan’s father – a university professor who published a liberal magazine and was always broke – has died. Without telling their families, they married. Stefan had met a woman at university and they fell in love. We now go back in time, to find out what prompted this behaviour. When a fellow officer comes out both to reproach him and to console him, he threatens to desert in order to go home. He then launches into a tirade against his commanding officer, which is completely contrary to rules, and storms out. However, Stefan takes this opportunity to ask for leave, for a second time. Noapte trainslation trial#One of the key issues is a trial taking place, where a man is accused of murder, after killing his wife for infidelity. In the officers’ (rudimentary) mess, there is a lot of gossip. He adds that the training is like the games they played as children. He is transferred to the frontier where there is more trench-building, which attracts the same comment from our hero. He comments that the trenches are like the ones they built as children when playing soldier games. He first serves in the Prahova Valley, where the Romanians are building trenches. They were not ready for war, as we shall see. Finally the Allies gave the Romanians an ultimatum and they agreed. The Romanians hesitated about joining the Allies but the Allies wanted them to do so, to deny Germany oil and to cut off communications between Germany and Turkey. When the king died, his successor was pro-Allies. Initially, the king had been pro-German while the political elite pro-Allies. Romania remained neutral during the first two years of World War I but came in on the side of the Allies in 1916. Home » Romania » Camil Petrescu » Ultima noapte de dragoste, întâia noapte de război Camil Petrescu: Ultima noapte de dragoste, întâia noapte de război ![]()
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![]() ![]() If you have received this e-mail in error please inform the sender and delete it from your mailbox or any other storage mechanism. I decided to risk breaking the law by posting this portion of the message in a public forum.Have Your Agents Talk To My Agents DISCLAIMER: This e-mail is confidential and should not be used by anyone who is not the original intended recipient. Any copying or further distribution beyond the original addressee is not intended, and may be unlawful.This one arrived in a spam message sent to me. If you have erroneously received this message, please delete it immediately and notify the sender. Redacted email funny software#But does the fact that it was automatically sent to me make it a form of spam? Hmmm – maybe there is a market for software that automatically removes disclaimers from e-mail messages.Speaking of Spam The information in this email is confidential, and intended solely for the Addressee. Thank goodness for that, because I can’t imagine having to copy and paste needless disclaimers into every e-mail that I sent. ![]() This disclaimer has been automatically added.So the disclaimer was automatically added. No liability is accepted for any unauthorised use of the information contained in this transmission. If you are not the intended recipient, any disclosure, copying or dissemination of the information is unauthorised and you should delete/destroy all copies and notify the sender. Which brings us to…Disclaimers as a Form of Spam? CONFIDENTIALITY NOTICE AND DISCLAIMER Information in this transmission is intended only for the person(s) to whom it is addressed and may contain privileged and/or confidential information. The Commonwealth Register of Institutions and Courses for Overseas Students (CRICOS) Provider Number is another numeric identifier (institution branch), yet another random numeric identifier (institution branch), and a final numeric identifier (institution branch) for institution.I don’t have concerns about the automatic filtering, just the automatic insertion of needless disclaimers. ![]() ![]() Please tell us if you have concerns about this automatic filtering. Email communications with institution may be subject to automated email filtering, which could result in the delay or deletion of a legitimate email before it is read by its intended recipient at institution. institution does not accept liability for any corruption or viruses or any consequence which arise as a result of this email transmission. It is very important that before opening any attachments to this email you check them for viruses and defects. The views expressed in this email are not necessarily those of institution. Any confidentiality is not waived or lost by reason of mistaken delivery to you. If you are not the intended recipient of this email you must not copy, distribute, take any action in reliance on it or disclose it to anyone. This email (and any attachment) is confidential and is intended for the use of the addressee(s) only. Like drafting disclaimers for toothpicks and such.An Institution By Any Other Name is Just a NumberThis educational institution felt the need not only to identify itself by name several times, but also include four specific numeric identifiers for itself.> YOU MUST READ THIS NOTICE This email has been sent by institution (institution’s random numeric identifier). If you are the lawyer or pseudo-lawyer that drafted these, please do us all a favor and find something else to work on. If you recognize your institution/company in these examples, please laugh along with me. Identifying information has been removed, but the humor was left intact. There wasn’t one that disclaimer that finally pushed the publication of this post over the edge just the accumulation of examples. I’ve been collecting disclaimers that appear on the bottom of e-mail messages in a draft post on DLTJ for about a year now – every time I’d get a new one with a different twist, I’d save it anticipating the day would come that there would be enough humor here to share with the rest of you.These list items are microformat entries and are hidden from view. ![]() ![]() You have both established voice-actors like Sugita Tomokazu and more unknown ones like the voice of the main character, Omigawa Chiaki. The ED is also great by the way, maid rock! Oh, and while we're in the sound section of the review. I wouldn't call it amazing or anything, but it's pretty good and it serves it purpose well. ![]() Which brings me to the soundtrack of the series. But to be fair, when combining the sweet sounds of ROUND TABLE with the OP animation of Shaft, you wouldn't expect anything less. Soremachi is no exception, I don't think I'm going too far by saying it's the best OP of 2010. When you think Shaft, you think great OP animations (well, at least I do). Both wide-angle and extreme frog-perspective shots see frequent use (or abuse, depending on your opinion), which brings a nice sense of Shaft-flair to the scenes. The black and white "I'm in despair!"-animation from the Sayonara Zetsubou Sensei-series is still there though, if anybody is wondering. The typical eye close-ups and large amounts of on-screen text which the studio is rather infamous for were also mostly absent. I guess their budget might be bigger this time due to Bakemonogatari's success, but I digress. This is REALLY uncommon for this studio's shows, usually featuring big dips in animation quality throughout. It was very fluid and quite detailed, and not only during the first episode, it kept the quality level relatively uniform during the whole series. One thing that was unexpected was the quality of the animation. It's all very simple, but due to Shaft's style of blowing simple things up to bizarre proportions, it works. The story is slice-of-life style, with two chapters from the manga adapted into each episode, keeping things fairly fast-paced and never boring in any sense of the word. ![]() Throw in a large cast of interesting characters, a bunch of puns, some lateral thinking puzzles, a couple of love triangles/squares and you've got yourself a winner. After school she works in Seaside, the maid cafe owned by her grandmother, together with her classmate Tatsuno. Enter Hotori, a quirky high school student whose dreams is to become a teenage Sherlock Holmes. Soredemo Machi wa Mawatteiru is fairly straightforward. Some times they'll create excellent animation and sharply delivered dialogue, other times they'll churn out something that looks more like a slideshow and the boring, endless monologues which are associated with them. For the unitiated: If Japan's anime industry was a party, and the studios were the invited, Shaft would be the high guy smoking joints on your favourite couch while eating all your snacks. I was familiar with the source material, but since the production was in the hands of Shaft, yeah. To be honest, I didn't know what to expect from this adaption. ![]() |
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